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. 1988 Jun 15;41(6):863-7.
doi: 10.1002/ijc.2910410616.

Site-selective cyclic AMP analogues are antagonistic to estrogen stimulation of growth and proto-oncogene expression in human breast-cancer cells

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Site-selective cyclic AMP analogues are antagonistic to estrogen stimulation of growth and proto-oncogene expression in human breast-cancer cells

D Katsaros et al. Int J Cancer. .

Abstract

Cyclic AMP (cAMP) analogues that selectively bind to either one of the two binding sites of cAMP-dependent protein kinase demonstrate a potent inhibition of the growth stimulated by estrogen in MCF-7 human breast-cancer cells in culture. The site-selective analogues, which are more potent activators of protein kinase than the analogues studied earlier, exhibit growth inhibition at micromolar concentrations. Among the analogues tested, 8-Cl-cAMP (Site I-selective) and N6-benzyl-cAMP (Site 2-selective) are the 2 most potent inhibitors, causing 40-70% inhibition of the estrogen-stimulated growth at 10-20 microM concentrations with no sign of toxicity. 8-Cl-cAMP (1 microM) in combination with N6-benzyl-cAMP (0.5 microM) almost completely blocks estrogen-stimulated growth, demonstrating synergism between the Site 1- and Site 2-selective analogues. The growth inhibition parallels an increase in the R11 cAMP receptor protein with a decrease in the R1 receptor as well as reduction of c-myc and c-ras oncoproteins, whereas growth inhibition by tamoxifen does not affect the levels of the cAMP receptor proteins or the c-myc and c-ras protein levels. Site-selective cAMP analogues are antagonistic to estrogen stimulation of breast-cancer cell growth through a mechanism different from that of tamoxifen.

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